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NULL IMMORTALIS

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Iritis

Saturday, 6 February 2010 8:30 P GMT+01
  Iritis is a rare, mysterious and potentially serious eye condition. I’ve suffered from iritis intermittently since 1973 – in either eye, but mainly the left. Thanks goodness, so far, never in both eyes at once! I have had it i

Butterflies in the Wind

Friday, 5 February 2010 9:48 A GMT+01
Following yesterday's article on Gunfleet Sands Wind Farm:Findings have just been announced today that moths and butterflies surf the wind; http://news.discovery.com/animals/migrating-insects-butterflies.html They instinctively or deliberately di

Gunfleet Sands Wind Farm

Thursday, 4 February 2010 7:24 P GMT+01
 Where I live.This was the then mysterious beginning of the process (November 2008):  And here today is the end result:

Dawn's Game

Wednesday, 3 February 2010 6:11 P GMT+01
In the old days, each day was indeed so old it could not recall anything with its failing memory. The people who lived during those old days – like me – tried to help each day as it dawned by calling up for it our own memories that we bel

Deal or No Deal

Tuesday, 2 February 2010 6:01 P GMT+01
  The Ligottian Banker on 'Deal or No Deal' certainly had a field day today. He even had his own rat army in the sewers. Noel Edmunds said he had tempered what the Banker said. So who knows to what creative depths of Horror the

CERN ZOO review

posted Sunday, 9 August 2009

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A 'Cern Zoo' review by The Author of 'Salmon Widow':

 

“Untitled”: Far more than “sweet nothings”: a wistful call to arms
for the world’s broken hearted. The young inside the old, and - for
the lucky few - the other way around.

“Dead Speak”: Polonium behind the arras? Weather hawks fight over
knowledge and wisdom. Off at a good clip!

“Parker”: The messenger not the message. An intimate portrayal - and
I raise my own Lady Parker in salute!

“Artis Eterne”: I love the timeless, placeless quality - the return
to childhood haunts and hauntings. Arthur’s legacy passed like a
dusty baton. Some very careful writing. I was completely absorbed.

“The Last Mermaid”: Big and bold. A rich seafood supper indeed!

“The Lion’s Den”: Assured and relaxed, the writing becomes invisible
- no higher aim for a writer. Bravo! The animalism is powerful and -
for me - is the truest embracer of the Cern Zoo concept. A FAVOURITE.

“Virtual Violence”: Lord of the Flies meets Cluedo. A wild little
number. Liked it.

“The Rude Man’s Menagerie”: This piece put me most in mind of the
“Untitled” opening story. Loss, memory and the very chalky earth
itself reaching up to engulf Rebs. Beautiful. Unusual. Ooh.

“Window to the Soul”: More memories. At a price.

“Pebbles”: I have as much respect for this story as the author
obviously has for her or his reader. It hangs like a dream. I loved
it. A FAVOURITE.

“The Shadow’s Departure”: Jittery, spiky and full of icicle limbs.
Strange, frightening. Truly visual.

“Being of Sound Mind”: Sara is faith personified. A leap of Sara. Did
Sara leap? Uncomfortable. Moving.

“Dear Doctor”: Hah!

“Mellie’s Zoo”: The childhood answer to “The Lion’s Den”. The
amplified imagination of children create creatures, worlds. Mellie’s
purple hippo becomes Sara’s Dolly. The mazey zoo, its puzzles leading
to... A deep story that I shall enjoy reading again.

“Turn The Crank”: Breathless, fearless writing! Loved it!

“The Devourer of Dreams”: A canny hand on the tiller here. Respect! A
web woven with skill and precision - and the web is woven around...
the reader!

“Just Another Day Down On The Farm”: Downbeat, downtrodden, the men
are as caged as the animals. The men have no names - nor do their
charges. I was numbed with real pain.

“Strange Scenes From An Unfinished Film”: Rather like the final
paragraph of “Devourer of Dreams”, “Strange Scenes...” directly
addresses the reader/narrator; tricking the light too drastic, the
shadows between the sprocket holes of the film blurring story reality
and story fantasy. Should he crack open a lager or a Kia-Ora? A bleak
triumph.

“Lion Friend”: Perfectly formed - like an acorn in its cup - and
polished like the deft shoes of a tap dancer.

“The Ozymandias Site”: This piece of vivacious cognitive estrangement
is strong, moving, beautiful rhythmical stuff. Sustained otherness;
utter humanity. To actually smell the moon... That such a story was
written - and that I was lucky enough to read it - made me dance. I
am still dancing. Thank you - whoever you are. A FAVOURITE.

“Cerne’s Zoo”: Animal souls slip through a gentle one. And - like
“Devourer of Dreams (yet again!) - it’s a gift that keeps on giving.
A little charmer.

“Sloth & Forgiveness”: Now here’s a right old laugh. Not “Albert and
the Lion” but “Albert and his One Alternative”. There’s evidence of
genuine madness here. I smiled all the way through.

“City of Fashion”: Some might read this story and give it no further
thought. I think it’s one of the best stories I’ve read in the last
ten years. A FAVOURITE.

“Fragment of Life”: Fraught and finely worked. Relentless. The
electrician’s brain becomes re-wired and uncrushed. A liberation of
sorts, a beginning of an end or... A very, very good story. Loss as a
process, not as a memory. Boy, what writing. I should give up. A
FAVOURITE.

 

 

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